Sunday, August 25, 2013

Somewhere in the comments below, someone asked if we really deal with this much asshattery every day, or is this blog just an overexaggeration?

Well, let me tell you now...

Over the course of just a few days:

1.) Non-client walks in my door at 11:59 am, just as half of my staff was headed to lunch. They'd had a very busy morning taking care of our good clients and deserved a break. They are SUCH hardworking people. Non-client proceeds to tell my staff that her dog had been sick for a few days and she needed to be seen. No problem - exam fee is $xx. Non-client informs my staff that she thought it was just ridiculous that she had to pay for an exam.... um, ok? Whatever. Then she informs my staff that I would see her right then because she was an excellent client (really? that's why you're a non-client?) and that she would be paying me on the 1st. (we all know that code) Staff informs her that we had an available appt at 3:45 pm and would be more than happy to see her then. Non-client throws a fit but eventually agrees to the appt time.

Fast forward to 3:45 pm. Non-client no-shows for the exam. Doesn't call, just doesn't show up. No problem, I've been doing this enough years to know that you never really put these into the schedule cause, well, these are usually crazy people.

So I put it out of my mind and as soon as I'm done with my last appt, I roll out and head home. My staff calls me almost immediately, letting me know that Non-client called at 4:59 pm with a message for me:

"You tell that doctor that I WILL be back at 8 am in the morning and I WILL not have any money and she WILL treat my dog and will wait for payment on the 1st!"

Yeah. OK. I was ready for her the next morning, but she no-showed again. Sigh. I didn't even get to unload on her dumb ass. But it did get my hackles up, especially since she felt that verbally abusing my hardworking awesome staff was somehow acceptable.

2.) Client who had been in twice in the last 5 years, calls at noon just as my hard working staff is trying to get lunch. Again. EMERGENCY! My dog was attacked... 2 days ago!!! And needs to be seen NOW!!! Well, OK... this really could be real, so come on down....

Poor, old decrepit sweet Lab, several infected bite wound all over his face and neck. Stiff as hell and can barely walk. Not on any pain meds, not current on any vaccines, and is a mess. I ask owner if she's considered providing some basic care for this dog? Her answer: Nah, he's not in any pain.

Um. OK.

So we do an exam, and provide her with an estimate for treatment for his wounds as well as some recommendations for care going forward.

Her answer: WHAT? I don't have any MONEY! My neighbor's dog did this so I'm gonna leave my dog with YOU while I go back home and ask him to pay the bill!

Seriously?

I told her that's fine, and the charge for leaving her dog with me would be $xx. (Having been down the abandonment road and the no payment road before, there was no way I was doing it for free)

She didn't like that answer. She stormed out, got into her CADILLAC and drove away.

3.) SAME DAY: Owner comes in with her dog, specifically for a behavior issue, saying the dog is showing aggression towards HER.

(Side note: male intact white German Shepherd. Do I need to say more?)

I walk in the room, he starts eyeing me and growling at me. On goes the muzzle. We do the exam, talk about the findings and I make recommendations, including one for a TRAINER, and for NEUTERING this beast.

Next day, owner calls, SCREAMING at my staff, about how we obviously didn't know what we were doing because we MUZZLED her dog!!! That was, apparently, cruel and unusual punishment.

(can I say that I might laugh if, in the future, I hear that he attacked her and ate her body?)

4.) Same week: Non-client calls and says he wants Tramadol for his dog. Specifically. Then tells me he doesn't want "all those tests" and that the dog is current at another vet's office. Huh? OK. So I am automatically suspicious, and I tell staff to call the client and tell him I will require previous vet records for the exam and any medications dispensed. Client becomes IRATE over this, saying it was a HASSLE now and that he just won't be back. GOOD, YOU FREAKING DRUG SEEKER!!!

I currently have a friend and colleague who is getting blasted online because she wasn't available when her clinic was closed for a client who let her own dog suffer for too long. My friend was taking care of her children, (you know, those silly things like feeding and educating them) and this client insisted she drop what she was doing and serve the client's needs immediately. Even though there is a referral hospital nearby - open when her clinic is closed. She had options. But she'd rather blast a good person, a mommy and a great vet, publicly, than take responsibility for her own actions.

I'm starting to feel like I need drugs myself just to deal with this DAILY crap.

We don't make this up, and this is the stuff that causes Burnout and Compassion Fatigue. It's very sad, but I don't know many vets who have been doing this for 20 years, who can honestly say they love it any more. It's just a job. And a sucky one at that.

Saturday, August 24, 2013

I had the delightful pleasure of speaking with a "pharmacy
representative" at Pet Care Rx today. My client, Mrs. Ina Hurry needed
medication for her "Cherub" ASAP. "Cherub" usually gets Medication, X mg,
BID; however the pharmacy request came in for Y mg. No problem, mistakes
occur. I call up Pet Care Rx and ask, as the prescribing authority,
to change the dosage and fax the updated prescription back to me so I
could authorize it.

The "pharmacy representative" told me that
she would have to get the client's authorization for the update on
dosage. I chuckled a bit and said "I'm the prescribing veterinarian,
I'm the one who says how much medication 'Cherub' needs. Clients may be
mistaken. Just fax me the new request." The rep continues to say that I
am not authorized to make changes to the prescription. Welcome to the
world of online pharmacies, where clients make all the calls and
veterinary authorization is not needed.

ME: It is the job of your pharmacist to check that client requests
match previously dispensed medications and if they do not, then the
prescribing veterinarian should be called. Check your records, "Cherub"
has only been on X mg, NOT Y mg. Your pharmacy license is on the line here.

REP: Cherub's never has had
prescriptions here, or has multiple pet profiles, since I can't see old
prescriptions in this profile"

ME: I'm staring at the prescription
request from April (which was correct). Multiple profiles is not very
effective at tracking prescriptions. I want to be transferred to the
pharmacist.

REP: There are none available.

ME: I would like to be transferred to your pharmacist's voicemail, please.

REP: Goodbye! (click)

What....the...hell......I
give up. Now I just have to sit back and wait for Mrs. Ina Hurry to
call us, ranting and raving that we declined her "Cherub's" prescription
request.

Well....off to tend to the Parvo positive puppy that
just came in....why can't we cite owners for neglect when they don't
vaccinate on time?

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Ringworm was one of the first things I learned to recognize
quickly when presented with an effected animal on my exam table. Now, this is
no great accomplishment. Ringworm is an easy one. Dermatomycosis. That’s what
we call it in the medical record, but not when trying to communicate with you
folks. You know what ringworm is, so we work with the language you know. A
fungus of the skin. Very contagious, especially between kittens and between
kittens and people. And that summer, we saw some nearly every day.

I was still the young
enthusiastic veterinarian, having only been burned by reality a few times. I’m
no fool, so each burn taught me a lesson. What seemed the right thing to do is
only right some of the time, so I learned to reel in my enthusiasm. I learned I
cannot fix it all, but that I must hold back and fix what I can. I could only
fix what they’d let me fix.

A woman I knew opened a pet store in town, selling pet food
and cages, hamsters and some fish, and she thought she could save the world by
taking in kittens and selling them for a pittance hoping for good homes for
many. She built a chicken wire enclosure, and all the kittens went in there,
and people came by and said, “I’ll take the orange one, that one over there”.
And one of those kittens went in that enclosure with ringworm, and it rubbed up
against all the other kittens, and all summer long, we saw kittens purchased
from this store, and they all had ringworm. And usually, it was Mom and the
kitten with ringworm, and the kid with ringworm. So I got real good at spotting
ringworm. And no, the woman who owned the pet store wouldn’t listen to me about
all that ringworm stuff, because all she wanted to do was sell kittens. What
happened after that did not concern her.

Now, this veterinary practice was in a town that was pretty
much the lowest common denominator, and folks there kept to a pretty marginal
standard. So if you owned a veterinary practice and you wanted your kids to get
a decent education, you didn’t let them attend the local schools. You spent the
money and the kids went to a private school in the fancy town over there. And
they made friends with the rich kids from the fancy town. And that is what my
boss did.

So when one of those friends had a kitten, and the friend’s
mom thought the kid had ringworm, but the kids physician thought she might have
lupus instead, somehow that family drove over the hill to let me examine the
kitten, and she brought her daughter along. And so on my exam table was a young
cat with classic ringworm, and the lovely 18 year old daughter standing next to
my table had a perfect, absolutely textbook example of ringworm on a human, the
perfect red circle on her neck, which does in fact sorta resemble lupus in some
young women. And I had to say something about this.

And I had to get real careful about what I said.

First….yes Mrs. Richlady, your kitten does have ringworm. No
doubt about that one. And yes, ringworm in a kitten is very easily transmitted
to a young lady who hugs a kitten to her neck. Your lovely daughter does have a
nice red perfectly round skin lesion on her neck which could easily be a
ringworm lesion. I am not a physician, so I have no opinion on whether that
round perfect ringworm lesion on your daughter’s neck is actually ringworm. But
if it were my daughter, I’d be talking with a dermatologist real soon, and
maybe the lupus specialist a moment later.

Now, I might have gotten hung over that statement, for as a
veterinarian, I have no right to say anything about a human medical condition.
No right whatsoever. For as a veterinarian, I know less than the drunken
homeless guy living in the bushes behind my clinic, when it comes to the
medicine of that species call human. Just ask any attorney or judge who thinks
I got my degree by sending in six box tops from my breakfast cereal. Sure, that
young lady did have ringworm, and it was stone obvious. But I had no business
claiming I knew what was wrong with her.

Now you might wonder why I have adopted such a pissy
attitude about a veterinarian talking about human medicine. Didn’t I spend
those years of pre-med college courses right next to those who went on to medical
school and dental school? Didn’t I outperform many of those students on my way
to qualifying for veterinary school? Don’t I have four years of post-graduate veterinary
medical education? Don’t I know far more than the average physician about those
things called zoonotic diseases, those diseases easily spread between animals
and humans? Well, that all is nice, but I am not a physician. So what I know
does not count for butkis, if applied to a human.

And here is why….

A year before the summer of ringworm, I had the misfortune
to examine a rather nasty Siamese cat belonging to an annoying,
knowitallknownothing man. The cat had some nasty lesions on its skin due to its
incessant licking. The licking was about allergies combined with the irascible annoying
incurable and frustrating habit of Siamese cats who like to lick sores on their
skin. In those days, we gave them injections of reposital steroids. Today we
know better, and we don’t use reposital steroids. Now we pretty much do
nothing. But back then the shots sorta helped, so I suggested we give this cat
an injection. The owner agreed.

Now, these steroid injections stung. No lying about that.
They annoyed these cats something awful. So as I set about to give this cat an
injection, I prepared for the worst. The owner, bless his stupid heart, had a
better plan.

I was going to grasp the cat by the scruff of its neck with
one hand whilst injecting the hind leg with the other. Often the cats were so
distracted by the one hand that they didn’t notice what the other was up to
until too late. This was a win.

And if they did notice, and they decided to launch for the
stars, the cats were aimed away from me, and so they attacked air instead of
me, or any other people in the room. The worst I expected was some scratch
marks on my forearms, and no one would die.

This owner knew better than me. HE wanted to hug the cat. I
was young and stupid, and so I let him make his case. He loved the cat and it
loved him. Sure, it bit him regularly, but she didn’t really mean him any harm
and he had always recovered. So no, he wasn’t going to let me inject the cat
unless he was hugging it.

I should have left the county about then, but I was young
and stupid. And he proceeded to hug the cat.

I looked at him in total disbelief. The way he held the cat
guaranteed that the cat would bit him on the forearm. Guaranteed. I mentioned
this to him. He dismissed my concerns. The cat always bit him, and he didn’t
worry about that. He was going to hold the cat, or no shot was to be given.

This is where youthful exuberance will get you every time. I
actually thought the high moral ground, and Darwin, established that this stupid
dipshit deserved to get bit on the forearm, so I let him hold the cat against
my direct instructions, and I went ahead and injected the cat.

I was right! The cat bit him on the forearm….rather
effectively.

OK, I’d done my job. The injection was given, and the lick
sores would soon, albeit only temporarily, disappear. The man stood there
bleeding from the four nice punctures in his arm. He commenced to tell me that
this was nothing, that the cat bit him all the time. And I kept interrupting.

You gotta take wounds like this seriously. They can get
terribly infected. Don’t try to blow this off.

Nah, it’s nothing. The cat bites me all the time.

You gotta take these wound seriously. If you see anything
that looks like infection you must get the wounds looked at and treated. This
is serious.

It’s nothing! The cat bits me all the time.

(You dumb f^^^ing idiot!!!) Would you please at least wash
off the wounds in my sink!!?! These can be serious, and you need to pay
attention to me. This part was that thing that stuck in my head about washing
out the wound from the bite of a rabid animal, for at the time this was
recommended before you even called the physician.

No problem doc. She bites me all the time. It’s nothing.

When the letter came, I was surprised. I was young, and
stupid. I didn’t know reality yet. But I soon learned.

I was being sued because the owner of that Siamese cat was self-employed,
and he had lost six weeks of work because of the infections caused by that cat
bite wound, the wound I had told him would be just fine if all he did was wash
it in my sink. It was all my fault.

Seriously?

Well, my insurance company settled with this guy’s attorneys
because they really had no defense, for I had acted as a physician when I told
him that all he needed to do was wash the wounds, and he would be fine.

And I
am not a physician. I’m only a …….veterinarian.

The lying part never came up. No really…the lying part never
came up. Guess who they believed?

So to this day, if your animal scratches you, or bites you…regardless
whether this happened at your home, in your car in my parking lot, or as you
lift your cat onto my exam table after I asked you not to do precisely that, I
will tell you to go see your physician, and then I will walk out of the room. I
will not offer you a Kleenex to mop up your blood. And even though that drunk
homeless guy in my bushes can give you a band aid, I cannot. So don’t ask. I
cannot afford to do for you what I know is right for you, and that I am fully
qualified to do as a breathing adult, much less as an educated and experienced
medical professional. I’m not allowed to do that.

Just a few years ago, I needed to administer some
subcutaneous fluids to a dehydrated, and very sick cat. I didn’t yet know what
was wrong with this cat, and would not until the fax machine in the morning
spilled out the test results, but I knew the cat needed some fluids so we set
out to do just that. So my highly skilled and experienced, not to mention very
compassionate assistant calmed and gently restrained the cat as I let the fluid
flow through the needle under her skin. All was well.

Until the owner, a well-intentioned but completely brain
free human body stepped in to help. She charged in with both hands, and the cat
exploded. My assistant managed to keep the cat from ventilating her owner, but
in the process she was severely bitten. She did not lose the function of her
hand, and in fact still works for me, but this is only because she was
uncommonly lucky.

To this day, we will not touch a cat for this one owner
unless there are at least two closed doors between her and her cats. Because I own the veterinary practice, and
therefore I am responsible for the bad effects of anything I do wrong, or my
staff does wrong, and whatever completely insane thing you do wrong, regardless
how hard I try to keep you from living up to your full potential.

So, if you ever wonder why your veterinarian won’t let you
hold little Precious, but she insists upon having her trained staff do that, please
STFU. There is a reason.

Wednesday, August 14, 2013

I know it can seem to be all doom and gloom in our profession these days. We are in a rough economy, there are too many vets and not enough work. Our new grads are coming out with mammoth, crushing debt loads. Many of us will lose our health care coverage in a few months. Things appear to be pretty bleak.

(In AVMA's defense, they only had 33 months to figure out how to keep us covered before they announced we were being dumped. It's not like they could have actually, you know, tried to find an alternative carrier or anything.)

And in the midst of this, many feel that our professional association, AVMA, has been worse than useless.

Their response has been to fund a new position for diversity and international relations at an undisclosed cost to us. Don't you look at your books at the end of the month and say "You know what this practice needs? More diversity and international business!"? I know I sure do!

They have also decided to spend almost a hundred grand of our money to determine if we need a new logo. Plus about the same to implement. Now I know some of you are muttering to yourselves something about lipstick and a pig, but you shouldn't. That would be unfair to the pig, it would smell better than this does.

So we feel a bit gloomy, and with some reason. But take heart, my colleagues, AVMA has finally found a solution to our woes!! They have released something that will make your heart soar!

Not only is it a game, it is an excellent soporific! I have insomnia, and by the end of the 3rd level, my head almost hit my laptop. As a bonus, if you are so brain dead that you can stay awake to the end of the 5th level, you are automatically nominated to the AVMA board!!

Seriously AVMA? Are you friggin kidding me? How much did this little gem cost? And if you are going to spend my money, couldn't you have at least have made it an interesting game? Did you even bother testing this on any actual kids?

I know I am not in the target age group of the game, but I can revert to 10 years old in an instant. Just ask my wife. I may be an old fart, but I love online games. Trust me, no kid will play this unless you grant dispensation from taking the trash out or mowing the yard as long as they play. Even with that, any kid will be begging to do chores within an hour, rather than play this crap.

Your job is to look out for our profession. Under your watch, enrollment and tuitions have skyrocketed. Nearly a fifth of us are losing our insurance, and still can get no definite answers from you months after you promised. Your response has been BS of varying degrees.

I did not think it possible for a group of educated, allegedly smart, allegedly functional adults could be so out of touch, so delusional. Until now.

Things

Welcome to the VBB Blog! Thanks for stopping by. For more information about us, please see this post.

Do you have something to say? Stories to share? If you'd like to submit a guest post for consideration, please write to us. You can request anonymous or with-attribution posting, of course. Not all submissions will be selected for publication.